funeral

Tutankhamun's Funeral

The exhibition 'Tutankhamun's Funeral' will feature jars, lids, bowls, floral collars, linen sheets, and bandages that were used at King Tut's mummification and the rites associated with his burial and related objects. These include a sculpted head of the youthful Tutankhamun and several facsimile paintings depicting funerary rituals. Archival photographs from the early 20th century by Harry Burton, the Museum's expedition photographer, will provide an evocative background.

Exhibition Details
Exhibition Venue: 
Metropolitan Museum of Art
Exhibition Dates: 
Tuesday 16 March 2010 to Saturday 6 November 2010 - ending in 233 days
Exhibition Status: 
current
Images
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Roman Life: 100 BC to AD 200

Publication subtitle: 
100 BC to AD 200
Month of publication: 
September
Day of publication: 
21
Number of Pages: 
176 pages

Tutankhamun's Burial Treasures: Animal Iconography

Dr Janice Kamrin explains the importance of animal iconography in Ancient Egypt, and in particular, the artefacts that were discovered in the Tomb of King Tutankhamun (KV62). Walking around the Egyptian Museum, Cairo, Dr Kamrin shows the three beds found in King Tut's tomb, which all adorn symbols of animal gods, and explains how they were significant in Ancient Egyptian beliefs.

You can read more about this video here, and watch the first part of this series - Tut's Treasures: The Canopic Shrine.

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Treasures from King Tut's Tomb - The Animal Gods explained by Dr. Janice Kamrin

Dr Janice Kamrin talks about Animal Iconography of the artefacts found in the Tomb of King Tutankhamun. Click image to skip to the video.The three ritual beds of Tutankhamun are a very serious proposition, guarded by some of the ancient world's fiercest chaperones. King Tut's Anubis Shrine, fashioned in the seventh year of Akhenaten's reign, was something to be carried processionally during the final movements of the king's mummy.

Funeral for Venice: Will 'Museum City' Win Back Inhabitants?

Next Saturday Venice will be holding its own funeral. As far as publicity stunts go, it's quite an unequivocal message that the city is on the brink. Only this time the threat is not from the rising tides and the island city's subsiding foundations; the danger comes in the form of the rapidly shrinking population – it seems that the Venetians are migrating to the mainland faster than you can say 'just one cornetto'.

According to one group of locals – members of the online community venessia.com - the population has now fallen below the threshold of 60,000 people (down from about 150,000 in 1960) and the city's inhabitants are being driven out of their ancestral homes by property, food and transport prices far higher than those on the mainland. The main reason for the soaring cost of living is the relentless flow of tourists to the small city. As a result the local Venetians are being priced out of their historical island city.

Sandro Vannini's Photography - King Tut's Golden Death Mask

The Golden Mask of King Tutankhamun may just be the most stunning artefact from ancient times that archaeologists have ever excavated. The fact that King Tut was a mere minor Pharaoh leaves the funerary gifts offered to the great ones up to our imagination, insofar as imagining such splendour and richness both in value and craftsmanship.  As the golden death mask is too fragile to travel, there is no way to see the famous mask unless you travel to Cairo - or is there? The closest you'll get to experiencing the real thing online is a collection of amazingly detailed photographs by Sandro Vannini, who has over time become an expert in capturing ancient Egyptian artefacts on film, and the virtual experience based on Sandro's photographs, the King Tut Virtual exhibition.

Tombstone of a cooper

The tombstone of a cooper

The tombstone of a cooper is on display at the Musee d'Aquitaine. The figure carried in his right hand a tool used by coopers. The barrel was a Gallic invention, and was widely used even in Roman times, for cervoise.

The cervoise was a beer made with barley or other grains such as peas or meslin dry and flavoured with herbs. First called cerveise, the drink, consumed in Antiquity and the Middle Ages, takes its name from the Gauls who gave it the Latin name cervesia.

Images
Put your Flickr photos of this object into the Heritage Key group, and tag them with keyobject-3034, to see them here!
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